原版英语RAZ 教案(Z1) Abraham Lincoln - From Log Cabin to the White House_DS.pdf
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1、ZZ1Z2www.readinga-Written by Bea SilverbergAbraham Lincoln:From Log Cabin to the White HouseA Reading AZ Level Z1 Leveled BookWord Count:1,694Visit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.WritingCreate five interview questions that you would ask Lincoln if you could.Develop responses to t
2、he questions based on how you think Lincoln would respond.Social StudiesLook up the text of the Gettysburg Address.Research vocabulary you do not understand.Rewrite the speech in your own words.ConnectionsAbrAhAm LincoLn:From Log Cabin to the White House LEVELED BOOK Z1Abraham Lincoln:From Log Cabin
3、 to the White HouseLevel Z1 Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Bea SilverbergIllustrated by Maria VorisAll rights reserved.www.readinga-Photo Credits:Front cover:Archive Images/Alamy;back cover:iStock/Greg Mullis Photography;title page:Corbis;page 3:iStock/Alice Scully;page 4:courtesy of Library of
4、Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-7951;page 5:courtesy of Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park/NPS;page 8:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZC4-6189;page 9:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B8171-3608;page 10:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZC4-2472;page 12(top
5、):courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ62-16377;page 12(bottom):courtesy of Library of Congress,Brady-Handy Collection,P&P Div LC-USZ62-110141;page 13:Bettmann/Corbis;page 14:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-DIG-ppmsca-07636;page 15:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-
6、7948;page 16:North Wind Picture Archives/Alamy;page 17:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-7890;page 18:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ61-1938;page 19:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ62-2073CorrelationLEVEL Z1WXN/A60Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAAbrAhAm L
7、incoLn From Log Cabin to the White Houseabolitioncivil rightseloquenceemancipatorequalityhomespunmomentousoratorprivilegesecedesolemnsovereigntyWords to Knowwww.readinga-Written by Bea SilverbergWhy is Abe Lincoln considered one of the most famous American presidents?Focus Question1920The war ended
8、on April 9,1865,four years after it began,and cost 600,000 lives.The Union survived,and slavery was abolished.But only six days later,President Abraham Lincoln lay dead from an assassins bullet.A Confederate sympathizer,John Wilkes Booth,shot Lincoln while he attended a play at Washingtons Fords The
9、atre.As Lincolns body was carried back to his beloved Illinois on a funeral train,mourners by the roadside silently saluted this great American hero.Glossaryabolition(n.)the act of doing away with or ending something;the act of making slavery illegal(p.16)civil rights(n.)legal,social,and economic ri
10、ghts that guarantee freedom and equality for all citizens(p.9)eloquence(n.)the ability to speak or write clearly and effectively;clear,effective writing or speaking(p.17)emancipator(n.)a person who sets others free(p.4)equality(n.)the condition in which everyone has the same rights(p.12)homespun(adj
11、.)humble;from a simple rural background(p.13)momentous(adj.)hugely important or of great consequence(p.14)orator(n.)a public speaker,especially an eloquent one(p.7)privilege(n.)a special benefit enjoyed under certain conditions;an honor(p.8)secede(v.)to formally withdraw from membership in an organi
12、zation or group(p.13)solemn(adj.)serious or sad(p.4)sovereignty(n.)the freedom to be in charge of ones own affairs(p.11)An 1865 depiction of Lincolns assassinationAbraham Lincoln:From Log Cabin to the White House Level Z1Abraham Lincoln:From Log Cabin to the White HouseLevel Z1 Leveled Book Learning
13、 AZWritten by Bea SilverbergIllustrated by Maria VorisAll rights reserved.www.readinga-Photo Credits:Front cover:Archive Images/Alamy;back cover:iStock/Greg Mullis Photography;title page:Corbis;page 3:iStock/Alice Scully;page 4:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-7951;page 5:courtesy of
14、Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park/NPS;page 8:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZC4-6189;page 9:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B8171-3608;page 10:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZC4-2472;page 12(top):courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ6
15、2-16377;page 12(bottom):courtesy of Library of Congress,Brady-Handy Collection,P&P Div LC-USZ62-110141;page 13:Bettmann/Corbis;page 14:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-DIG-ppmsca-07636;page 15:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-7948;page 16:North Wind Picture Archives/Alamy;pa
16、ge 17:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-B817-7890;page 18:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ61-1938;page 19:courtesy of Library of Congress,P&P Div LC-USZ62-2073CorrelationLEVEL Z1WXN/A60Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAAbrAhAm LincoLn From Log Cabin to the White Houseabolition
17、civil rightseloquenceemancipatorequalityhomespunmomentousoratorprivilegesecedesolemnsovereigntyWords to Knowwww.readinga-Written by Bea SilverbergWhy is Abe Lincoln considered one of the most famous American presidents?Focus Question1920The war ended on April 9,1865,four years after it began,and cos
18、t 600,000 lives.The Union survived,and slavery was abolished.But only six days later,President Abraham Lincoln lay dead from an assassins bullet.A Confederate sympathizer,John Wilkes Booth,shot Lincoln while he attended a play at Washingtons Fords Theatre.As Lincolns body was carried back to his bel
19、oved Illinois on a funeral train,mourners by the roadside silently saluted this great American hero.Glossaryabolition(n.)the act of doing away with or ending something;the act of making slavery illegal(p.16)civil rights(n.)legal,social,and economic rights that guarantee freedom and equality for all
20、citizens(p.9)eloquence(n.)the ability to speak or write clearly and effectively;clear,effective writing or speaking(p.17)emancipator(n.)a person who sets others free(p.4)equality(n.)the condition in which everyone has the same rights(p.12)homespun(adj.)humble;from a simple rural background(p.13)mome
21、ntous(adj.)hugely important or of great consequence(p.14)orator(n.)a public speaker,especially an eloquent one(p.7)privilege(n.)a special benefit enjoyed under certain conditions;an honor(p.8)secede(v.)to formally withdraw from membership in an organization or group(p.13)solemn(adj.)serious or sad(p
22、.4)sovereignty(n.)the freedom to be in charge of ones own affairs(p.11)An 1865 depiction of Lincolns assassinationAbraham Lincoln:From Log Cabin to the White House Level Z11718The summer of 1863 brought victory to Union forces at Gettysburg,a turning point in the war.President Lincoln,while dedicati
23、ng a cemetery to the many soldiers who had died,delivered his famous Gettysburg Address.The speech lasted only two minutes,yet it is remembered for its simple beauty and eloquence.Lincoln spoke of the war as a test of whether the nation could survive as a democracy.He challenged those still alive to
24、 complete the unfinished work of those who had died,“that the government of the people,by the people,for the people,shall not perish from the earth.”Under the newly named General Ulysses S.Grant,the Union armies won victories in the West and South.Lincoln saw hope of the wars end as Confederate troo
25、ps were defeated in Georgia and Virginia in late 1864.He was re-elected president and,in early 1865,cheered the Congressional passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S.Constitution,which prohibited slavery in the United States.Company E,4th U.S.Colored Infantry was composed of former slaves and
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